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The Busyness Paradox

The Busyness Paradox

By: Frank and Paul
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About this listen

The world of work is a world of paradox. In this podcast, we tackle your everyday workplace or office environment topics, challenges, or activities. We also discuss trends and strategy in business. Our end goal is to help managers stamp out bad practices and help employees deal with them. Drs. Frank Butler and Paul Harvey, two management professors, co-host this podcast. We encourage your participation in our podcast by asking questions or sharing your experiences with us.© 2026 The Busyness Paradox Economics Management Management & Leadership Personal Development Personal Success
Episodes
  • Semantically Empty: Corporate BS and the Paradox of Sounding Smart
    Apr 20 2026

    In this episode, we tackle something everyone recognizes, but no one has really tested until now: corporate bullshit.

    Inspired by recent research and a Cornell study on the Corporate Bullshit Receptivity Scale, we break down what corporate BS actually is, why it works, and what it says about both the people delivering it and the people buying into it.

    We also put it to the test with a game of “Is It Corporate BS?” and discover that real executive communication is often indistinguishable from complete nonsense.

    Along the way, we explore a troubling paradox: the people most impressed by corporate jargon may be the least equipped to make good decisions, yet they are often the most satisfied and inspired at work.

    As always, we remain the most regularly irregular podcast on the planet, recording only when inspiration strikes.

    Key Takeaways

    • Corporate BS is not just annoying, it can signal poor decision-making
    • “Semantically empty” language sounds impressive but lacks meaning
    • People who are more receptive to corporate jargon may rate leaders more highly
    • There may be a feedback loop where BS-friendly employees elevate BS-speaking leaders
    • Sometimes corporate BS is not accidental, it can be used intentionally to obscure reality
    • If you cannot understand something, it is not always because it is smart

    Links Referenced

    • Cornell article on corporate BS:
      https://news.cornell.edu/stories/2026/03/workers-who-love-synergizing-paradigms-might-be-bad-their-jobs
    • Original research on the Corporate Bullshit Receptivity Scale:
      https://www.researchgate.net/publication/400597536_The_Corporate_Bullshit_Receptivity_Scale_Development_validation_and_associations_with_workplace_outcomes

    Episode Highlights

    • The definition of corporate BS and how it differs from real jargon
    • “Semantically empty” as the phrase of the episode
    • The Pepsi and Microsoft examples of BS gone wrong
    • Weaponized corporate BS in layoffs
    • The “Is It Corporate BS?” game
    • The realization that we may also be part of the problem

    Come visit us at busynessparadox.com to see episode transcripts, blog posts and other content while you’re there!

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    55 mins
  • AI in HR: What’s the Worst That Could Happen? (Live from SMA)
    Dec 23 2025

    Live from the Southern Management Association conference in Greenville, SC, Frank hosts a special episode of The Busyness Paradox with guest Dr. Julie Hancock, Director of the People Center at the University of North Texas (https://cob.unt.edu/mgmt/tpc/index.html). With Paul “replaced by AI” for the day, the conversation explores the intersection of artificial intelligence and human resources—and what happens when algorithms meet employee lives.

    They tackle big questions:
    •Should we actually worry when AI isn’t involved in hiring?
    •Can algorithms remove bias—or just learn new ones from us?
    •Does AI improve HR decisions, or simply automate bad ones faster?
    •What skills will the next generation need to thrive alongside AI?
    •How do we protect the “human” side of human resources?

    Along the way, they dive into:
    •The dangers of AI hallucinations (including fake meta-analyses and citations).
    •Students using ChatGPT in creative — and not-so-creative — ways.
    •HR’s reputation as the “Grim Reaper” and how AI could make that worse.
    •Whether robots will eventually achieve citizenship, feelings, or just vacuum better.
    •Why prompt engineering may become the next big job field.

    This episode blends humor, real-world HR insight, and a live audience eager to jump into the discussion. If you care about work, people, ethics, or the future of HR, this one’s for you.

    Come visit us at busynessparadox.com to see episode transcripts, blog posts and other content while you’re there!

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    56 mins
  • Free Bagels Won’t Fix It: Why Gen Z Hates Work
    Oct 7 2025

    In this episode of The Busyness Paradox, Frank and Paul dive into Maya Sulkin’s viral article, Why Gen Z Hates Work, and unpack what’s really driving younger workers’ frustrations with traditional careers. From stalled job markets to the lure of influencer lifestyles, we explore how cultural shifts and economic realities collide in shaping Gen Z’s approach to work.

    🔑 Key Topics Covered

    •Why Gen Z unemployment is more than double the national average

    •How TikTok and influencer culture make corporate jobs look meaningless

    •Real-life stories: job rejections, influencer “success,” and burnout

    •Why middle management has become a “punishment” instead of a promotion

    •The disconnect between corporate perks and what Gen Z actually values

    •What this generational shift means for the future of work

    🤔 Why You Should Listen

    Whether you think Gen Z is lazy, savvy, or simply playing by new rules, this episode will challenge assumptions about work, purpose, and what younger generations actually want from their careers. Spoiler: it’s not free bagels.

    📌 Episode Links

    •Original article: Why Gen Z Hates Work – The Free Press

    •More episodes of The Busyness Paradox: busynessparadox.com


    Come visit us at busynessparadox.com to see episode transcripts, blog posts and other content while you’re there!

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    39 mins
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